Bureaucratic Class Forms Armenia’s Political Force – Vahan Hovhannis

BUREAUCRATIC CLASS FORMS ARMENIA’S POLITICAL FORCE – VAHAN HOVHANNISSYAN

03.05.12

Representatives of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaktsutyun
(ARF-D) conducted today a meeting with the businessmen to present
reforms ARF-D will implement if elected.

Referring to the home policy, member of the ARF Bureau Vahan
Hovhannisyan said the bureaucratic class is Armenia’s main political
force, and it governs the country under the names of different parties.

‘First was the Armenian National Movement, then came the Republican
Party of Armenia, followed by the coalition,’ he said.

Vahan Hovhannissyan noted that only in Armenia’s case people outside
of the country cannot vote which Hovhannissyan said is not accidental.

‘There is nothing like it in any of the country. The Armenian
authorities know quite well that the people outside will die but not
vote for the ruling party. Our authorities prefer to deprive them of
voting right but keep the power,’ the ARF Bureau member said.

According to him, the authorities are creating artificial impediments
for economy’s development.

‘Even Diaspora Armenians have stopped their patriotic investments in
Armenia seeing the disastrous economy of the country,’ Hovhannissyan
said, adding that only the ARF-D may change the situation.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2012/05/03/vahan-hovhannisyan/

Armenia As A Punished Child

ARMENIA AS A PUNISHED CHILD
Yeghishe Metsarents

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 10:36:18 – 03/05/2012

We learnt yesterday that the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) has
imposed a fine on Armenia for pulling out of Eurovision 212 to be
held in Baku. According to the decision of the Union, Armenia will
have to pay the participation fee and the half of that sum as a fine
and to air the song contest live without interruption.

The EBU stated that Armenia is fined because it withdrew only after
the expiration of deadlines to pull out.

So, Armenia is fined for protraction and delay.

For months, the Public TV of Armenia has been trying to decide whether
to go or not to go to Baku, in case it was more than clear that it
was not necessary to participate in a show hosted by a country which
keeps Armenian military hostages, which organizes commandos killing
Armenian soldiers and kidnapping Armenian citizens.

Moreover, Armenia had to call on other European countries not to
attend the show because Azerbaijan is far from European values and
it can’t be the capital to host such an event of the European family.

Sure, this appeal would hardly influence on the Eurovision 2012,
but this would be more logic than the uncertainty whether to go or
not to Eurovision, then the decision not to go and the obligation to
pay a fine.

Actually, it’s the Public Television of Armenia to pay the fine so, it
comes out to be the money of the taxpayers since this TV is sponsored
by budget means.

Instead of decent boycott Armenia appears in the role of the punished
child.

This is also for the reason that along the attempts to silence the
liberal expressions in Armenia by pseudo-nationalism, the official
Yerevan actually failed to express a really national and state stance
about the Eurovision. While it is doubtless that the decision to
attend or not the Eurovision was at the highest levels of the power.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/society26027.html

L’Azerbaidjan A Bombarde Un Village Frontalier Armenien Pendant Une

L’AZERBAIDJAN A BOMBARDE UN VILLAGE FRONTALIER ARMENIEN PENDANT UNE DEMI-HEURE
Stephane

armenews.com
jeudi 3 mai 2012

Dans la matinee du 25 avril, les forces azerbaïdjanaises ont tire
pendant plus de 30 minutes en direction de l’ecole maternelle du
village frontalier de Dovegh dans la region du Tavouch (nord-est
de l’Armenie). Les enfants ont ete evacues. Heureusement, l’on ne
deplore pas de victime. A ete endommagee une voiture garee dans la
cour de l’ecole. Suite a une riposte adequate des forces armeniennes,
l’adversaire s’est tu. Azg est convaincu que ce bombardement avait pour
objectif de faire des victimes parmi la population civile armenienne et
s’etonne que ni le Palais presidentiel, ni le Ministère de la defense,
en l’occurrence le Ministre, ni le MAE, ni le Conseil de securite
nationale n’aient condamne l’incident dans une declaration, alors
que, selon le journal, le Ministre de la defense aurait dû se rendre
immediatement sur place avec un groupe de journalistes. Le MAE devrait,
poursuit Azg, immediatement convoquer une conference de presse afin
de denoncer, a l’intention des pays copresidents du Groupe de Minsk,
cette agression de l’Azerbaïdjan prenant pour cible des enfants. /
Rapporte par l’ensemble de la presse

Ambassade de France en Armenie

Service de presse

Opposition Leader Backs ‘Anti-Fraud’ Appeal To Court

OPPOSITION LEADER BACKS ‘ANTI-FRAUD’ APPEAL TO COURT
Nare Stepanian, Irina Hovhannisyan

02.05.2012

Armenia – Opposition leader Raffi Hovannisian is embraced by a
supporter during an election campaign event in Yerevan, 1 May 2012.

Raffi Hovannisian, the leader of the Zharangutyun (Heritage),
voiced support on Wednesday for an election-related appeal to the
Constitutional Court filed by two other major opposition groups and
the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK).

Hovannisian said the BHK, the Armenian National Congress (HAK) and
the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) are right to
demand that electoral authorities publish the lists of voters who
will have cast their ballots in Sunday’s parliamentary elections.

The three political forces say that this is essential for preventing
fraudulent voting in favor of the ruling Republican Party (HHK) and
that Armenia’s allegedly inflated voter registers allow the authorities
to resort to such falsifications. They want the Constitutional Court
to declare unconstitutional a legal provision that bans election
commissions from publicizing the names of actual voters.

The court is expected to consider and rule on the appeal on Saturday.

The HHK has rejected the opposition demand backed by Zharangutyun,
saying that releasing those lists would breach the secrecy of ballot.

“In our opinion, that is not a violation of the secrecy of ballot,”
Hovannisian told reporters in the northern city of Vanadzor.

“Therefore, we agree with the demands presented by our partners
to the Constitutional Court. We hope that the court will make the
right decision.”

A BHK leader, Vartan Oskanian, spoke last week of “tens of thousands
of inaccuracies” which he said his party has found in national
voter rolls. He claimed that those include names of bogus voters
simultaneously registered at various electoral districts with slightly
altered names.

Levon Zurabian, an HAK leader, pointed to an “abnormally” large
number of households with ten or more registered voters. He said
HAK campaigners have also detected voters listed as residents of
non-existent or abandoned apartments buildings in Yerevan.

Garnik Sahakian, a Zharangutyun candidate in a single-mandate
constituency in Vanadzor, likewise complained about the lists available
on the Internet. “There is an apartment with 27 registered voters,”
he said. “But I went there I didn’t find those residents.”

The head of Armenia’s largest election-monitoring organization,
It’s Your Choice, expressed similar concerns at a news conference
in Yerevan on Wednesday. Harutiun Hambardzumian reported instances
of a disproportionately large number of voters registered in single
apartments or at non-existent addresses. “There are streets that I
haven’t heard about before,” he said.

Still, Hambardzumian was by and large satisfied with the course of the
current election campaign, saying that it has been remarkably peaceful
and orderly. There have been few instances of government officials
and loyalists bullying voters, attacking opposition campaigners or
obstructing their campaigning, he said.

http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/24567863.html

Simply Quince makes The New York Times!

In the Garden

In Praise of the Misunderstood Quince

Tony Cenicola/The New York Times
Outside the Cloisters. More Photos »

By MICHAEL TORTORELLO

Published: May 2, 2012

AFTER half a century in public life, the most famous quince trees in
New York are looking – let’s say mature. Or how about distinguished?

The Quince, Coast to Coast

No need to beat around the bush, said Deirdre Larkin, the
horticulturist who tends the four beloved quinces at the Cloisters
Museum and Gardens, along the Hudson River in Fort Tryon Park.

`They are old, and nothing will change that,’ she said. `We have a
habit of thinking when you are aged, you might as well be dead and
replaced with something new.’ Yet in Europe, where the quince’s yellow
pome is a culinary treasure, orchardists will buttress the sagging
limbs with a crutch. As fixes go, this would seem to be the equivalent
of rigging a two-legged dog with training wheels.

But, Ms. Larkin said, `trees can live for hundreds of years.’

`The period of their senescence is the longest period of their life,’
she said. `Even though I am aging – I am not going to look the way I
looked when I was 30, 40 or 50 – I’m not going to die tomorrow.’

Especially not if Ms. Larkin, who is 61, takes care of herself the way
she babies her quince trees. In recent years, she has untangled the
girdled roots and sprayed the leaves for protection against the
desiccating winds that blow in from New Jersey. And with an arborist,
Fran Reidy, she has waged a fierce campaign against another enemy, the
apple maggot, deploying a product called Tanglefoot (which sounds like
an epithet on `Dancing With the Stars’). Given such diligence, you
might think these were not just the most famous but the only quince
trees in New York. Not so. Or not quite. A handful of Hudson Valley
growers sell quince at the city’s Greenmarkets in October and
November. But after a few years of fruitless searching, you may come
to the same conclusion that I did last fall: if you want a good
quince, you’ll have to grow it yourself.

What most Americans know about quince (Cydonia oblonga) – if they know
about quince at all – is that it was once a fixture in Grandma’s
garden. O.K., Great-Great-Grandma’s garden. As long ago as 1922, the
great New York pomologist U. P. Hedrick rued that `the quince, the
`golden apple’ of the ancients, once dedicated to deities, and looked
upon as the emblem of love and happiness, for centuries the favorite
pome, is now neglected and the least esteemed of commonly cultivated
tree-fruits.’ Almost every Colonial kitchen garden had a quince
tree. But there was seldom need for two, said Joseph Postman, the
United States Department of Agriculture scientist who curates the
quince collection in Corvallis, Ore. Settlers valued quince, above
all, as a mother lode of pectin for making preserves. And for that
task, a little fruit went a long way.

`If you put the seeds in a cup of water, it becomes almost like
Jell-O,’ Mr. Postman said. This goo doubled as a pomade. (If you try
this at home, please post photos.) Like so many American workers, the
quince lost its job to a disruptive technology: powdered gelatin,
introduced by Charles Knox in the 1890s. Unemployment has been
tough. Today the nation’s entire quince crop covers a paltry 250 acres
– about the size of the lawns in Central Park. By contrast, farmers
this year will raise some 350,000 acres of apples and 96 million acres
of corn.

SO we arrive, perforce, at a fundamental question: Is raw quince
edible?

`Maybe I’m not a fair one to ask,’ Mr. Postman said. `Because I will
eat a lot of things right off the tree that my wife will turn up her
nose at.’ The skin, fuzzy at first, has `an objectionable texture,’ he
added. And when the flavor is not sour, it’s sour and
astringent. Cutting into the obdurate flesh practically takes a
katana. But then what to make of the many appetizing quince products I
recently assembled on my kitchen counter, like quince paste (what the
Spanish call membrillo), quince slices in syrup and quince butter with
almond and pinyon?

The key to enjoying quince at home, apparently, is to cook it and cook
it and cook it. At that point, the quince is ready to cook.

I also got my hands on what may be the country’s only commercial
quince liqueur and quince cider. The latter came from Eaglemount Wine
and Cider, near Port Townsend, Wash., where Trudy Davis, a vintner,
has been experimenting with about a ton of quince from the San Juan
Islands. I would pair this noncloying cider with something dry and
sharp: say, a cave-aged English Cheddar and a few episodes of Aubrey
Plaza’s deadpan on `Parks and Recreation.’

True to reputation, `quince are quite hard to work with,’ Ms. Davis
said, even with a `big commercial grinder.’

The quest for a quince that can be eaten out of the hand like its
botanical cousins, the apple and the pear, has sent Mr. Postman on
collecting trips to the tree’s ancestral homeland in the
Trans-Caucasus: Armenia and Georgia. He accessioned another store of
quince from a forsaken Soviet-era gene bank in Kara-Kala,
Turkmenistan.

Some of these cultivars, with improved cold-hardiness and
disease-resistance, are trickling into the garden world from One Green
World, a tree farm in the Willamette Valley. The nursery stocks a
Russian variety called Aromatnaya that I recently ordered, as a
bare-root sapling, to start this spring in the yard.

The quince tree is self-pollinating: you need only one. If you train
the growth to a few trunks, a quince shouldn’t get much taller than a
gardener can reach with a six-foot ladder.

Whatever the habit, there’s a case to be made for the quince as an
ornamental, and Mr. Postman gamely makes it. `Few small trees rival
the quince in becoming interestingly gnarled and twisted with age,’ he
writes in a monograph with the fitting title `The Unappreciated
Quince.’

By now, Mr. Postman has probably grown more varieties of quince than
anyone else on the continent. The Corvallis germ-plasm repository
contains 50 or 60 edible varieties, and provides material to
researchers and plant breeders. In plainer terms, Mr. Postman’s wife
calls him `a tree librarian.’

When I spoke to Mr. Postman, in fact, the couple was driving across
Arizona with a fresh quince cutting in the back seat. Mr. Postman had
just stopped at the historic Mission San José de Tumacácori, about 20
miles north of the Mexican border. Researchers there have been
replanting the neglected orchard with the forgotten fruit varieties of
17th-century Jesuit missionaries. An appetite for the quixotic seems
to go with raising quince.

`I hesitate to use this word, but it almost feels like a cult,’
Mr. Postman said. `There’s a group of dedicated quince fanciers
around, and they’re kind of spreading the word and other people are
getting interested.’

Or maybe not, he allowed.

`I tend to run in this set of fruit fanatics, so it’s hard to tell.’

TREMAINE ARKLEY, for example, began growing quince eight years ago to
take to his aunt, who remembered the fruit from the Sephardic cuisine
of her youth. He started, conservatively, with 12 trees.

Last fall, Mr. Arkley brokered eight tons of quince to restaurants,
farmers’ markets, a cidery, a distillery and presumably every other
quince nibbler within 50 leagues of his farm in Independence,
Ore. `It’s sort of my personality,’ he said. `I tend to overdo things,
that’s the honest truth. Instead of one, why not get 12?’

Mr. Arkley was due for a new obsession, anyway. In the 1980s, he took
up six-wicket croquet. (`Not backyard croquet,’ he said, `but the kind
played in the British Empire, on a putting-green surface.’) Within a
few years, he had become national champion. The 25 quince trees he
currently grows on his 1900-era farmstead stand just north of the
laser-leveled croquet lawn.

Another 125 trees, of an old French variety, belong to Earl Bruck, a
nearby orchardist. `He originally planted 1,000,’ Mr. Arkley said. But
`he didn’t know how to sell them.’

`They were rotting on the ground,’ Mr. Arkley continued. `He started
ripping the trees out. When I met him, I said: `Earl, stop! Let me see
if I can market these for you.’ ‘

Mr. Arkley is pleased to have found a good home for all that
quince. Even so, `I don’t think it will ever have a big following,’ he
said. `Just like croquet will never be a big sport.’

So why grow this disregarded fruit?

`I’ll tell you why: because everyone else grows pears and apples and
cherries and plums,’ Mr. Arkley said. `Why bother? I like to do
something offbeat. With a name like mine – where do you start? It’s a
curse: Tremaine Arkley? Come on. You go to Google `Tremaine Arkley,’
and I’m the only one in the world.’

Mr. Arkley, in other words, is a quince among quinces.

Grow It, Cook It, Treat It Right

A bushel of good quince will fetch $2.50 at farmers’ markets in New
Jersey. At least it did in the late 19th century, when the
Rev. William W. Meech published `Quince Culture,’ the definitive – and
possibly the only – guide to cultivating the fruit. (You can read it
at archive.org.)

Alas, the price of quince may have fallen since then. The problem,
quince partisans maintain, is that few of us know what to do with the
adamantine fruit. The food writer Barbara Ghazarian offers a bumper
crop of ideas in her cookbook `Simply Quince.’ There are basic
instructions here for baking, poaching, pickling and preserving
quince. A savory palate might want to try one of the more ambitious
recipes, like duck breasts with quince-sambal chutney.

As for the creamy cauliflower-quince gratin? Let’s save that until the
quince revival has taken firm root. The book ($20) is available on
Ms. Ghazarian’s Web site (queen-of-quince.com), along with a handy
coring tool she calls the Fresno Armenian Ladies’ Kitchen Widget
($12.50).

The best-tasting variety of quince remains a subject of
conjecture. Mr. Meech identified 15 varieties including an `orange’
type that he, with great reluctance, consented to call Meech’s
Prolific. It’s one of the six cultivars grown at the Willowrose Bay
orchard, in Washington, that Trudy Davis, a vintner, blends into a
fragrant hard cider (eaglemountwinery.com; a 750-milliliter bottle
costs $19, and the 2012 vintage comes out later this month).

Nine quince varieties can be found at One Green World, a Willamette
Valley nursery that specializes in uncommon fruit trees
(onegreenworld.com; $21.95 to $24.95 for a bare-root tree). The
self-professed quince fanatic Tremaine Arkley prefers the flavor of
the nursery’s Central Asian cultivars, Aromatnaya and Smyrna. Another
Northwest grower, Raintree Nursery, lists Smyrna and a couple of other
varieties for more or less the same price (raintreenursery.com).

Smyrna, by the way, is the quince with the `beautifully contorted
habit’ that Deirdre Larkin, a horticulturist, tends fastidiously at
the Cloisters Museum and Gardens. Her quince quartet in the Bonnefont
garden is healthy (repeat, these trees are not dying!). But `providing
for all contingencies,’ Ms. Larkin recently ordered some understudies
from Ty Ty Nursery, in Georgia (tytyga.com; prices start at $59.75 for
a five- or six-foot bare-root tree).

Chilly winters haven’t seemed to frighten the Smyrna quince that
Ms. Larkin keeps at her weekend house in the Catskills. As Joseph
Postman, a quince curator, noted in a recent study the United States
Department of Agriculture found that quince was `much more cold hardy
than we anticipated, particularly these varieties from Russia and
Armenia.’

A bigger problem, Mr. Postman said, may be fire blight, a bacterium
that thrives in hot, humid climates and leaves scorched-looking wood
in its wake. `Quince is notoriously susceptible,’ he said. But `New
York is not as prone as places a little farther south.’

Overhead watering fosters fire blight, as does fertilizing, which
encourages the growth of susceptible suckers. But once established,
the trees seem to do fine without such ministrations, Mr. Postman
said.

After all, if a lack of attention were fatal, the quince would be gone
by now.

Queen of Quince

831-655-4377

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/03/garden/in-praise-of-the-misunderstood-quince-tree.html?_r=1
www.queenofquince.com

Le Parti Zharangutyun " Pret " Pour Des Protestations Post-Election

LE PARTI ZHARANGUTYUN ” PRET ” POUR DES PROTESTATIONS POST-ELECTION
Stephane

armenews.com
vendredi 4 mai 2012

Le parti d’opposition Zharangutyun (Heritage) organisera des
protestations de rue si les autorites armeniennes fraudent lors des
elections parlementaires du 6 mai a declare son chef Raffi Hovannisian.

” Si nous avons, pour la première fois depuis 1991, des elections
libres et justes et constitutionnelles nous les feliciterons. Mais si
les elections sont manipulees, le parti Zharangutyun sera dans la rue
le 7 mai ” a declare raffi Hovannisian au service armenien de RFE/RL
(Azatutyun.am).

Le Congrès National Armenien (HAK) a aussi averti qu’il recommandera
vivement a ses partisans de manifester dans les rues d’Erevan en cas
de fraude serieuse.

Rien n’indique que le HAK et le parti Zharangutyun veuillent faire
une campagne commune.

Les relations entre les deux forces d’opposition se sont deteriorees
ces recentes semaines a cause de desaccords sur une cooperation de
l’opposition avec le parti Armenie Prospère (BHK) dans le combat pour
la liberte et de justes elections.

Des leaders du parti Zharangutyun ont mis en doute la volonte affichee
du BHK d’un vote propre.

BAKU: Baku Responds To Several European Countries’ Criticism

BAKU RESPONDS TO SEVERAL EUROPEAN COUNTRIES’ CRITICISM

Trend
May 2 2012
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan is ready to host Eurovision song contest despite the
political games around the country, Head of the Department on Work with
Law-Enforcement Agencies of the Azerbaijani Presidential Administration
Fuad Alasgarov said today.

“Azerbaijan is ready to host Eurovision song contest and show the
world that despite the continued occupation of our lands by Armenia,
a large number of refugees and internally displaced people, political
games around the country, we go forward and join the number of leading
countries in all areas of development in the foreseeable future,”
he told Trend while commenting on the recent statements over the
boycott of Eurovision song contest.

PACE member Christoph Strasser and German Federal Government
Commissioner for Human Rights Policy and Humanitarian Aid Markus
Loening have recently urged to boycott Eurovision song contest,
to be held in Baku in late May.

“I think that it would be helpful for a politician, planning to
prepare a report on the situation in any country, still refusing
from visiting this country and having the biased attitude to the
development of democratic institutions in Azerbaijan, to observe the
situation in his country,” he said.

“Regarding Markus Loening, who regularly criticizes the Azerbaijani
authorities on several issues, the fact that the Commissioner for
Human Rights (Ombudsman) is included in the German Foreign Ministry,
is unlikely to stipulate his position as completely independent and
impartial,” he said.

“Bundestag member and the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Federal
Republic of Germany, claiming to be the leader of the European Union,
first of all, should deal with human rights protection in his country,”
he added. “There are many problems in this area.”

“At present, the German government has not fulfilled 97 decisions of
the European Court of Human Rights relating to the violations of the
provisions of the European Convention on Human Rights,” he stressed.

“For example, the decision dated 2003 related to the violation of
Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights due to too long
consideration of the case in the court is among them. The German
government has not made general measures to fulfill this decision.”

“Moreover, one of the most recent decisions of the European Court is
the decision on Schwabe’s case and others,” he said.

“The applicants have been detained for five days before the protest
action on the basis of unclear suspicions and due to the fact that
the posters reflecting the demand to release political prisoners have
been found in their cars,” he added. “In this case, the Court admitted
the violation of the applicants’ rights as the freedom of assembly.”

According to news agencies, the individuals were arrested and injured
during May 1 actions of leftist youth movements in Berlin yesterday.

But their exact number is unknown. The streets were cordoned off by
police. There were many police cars, ambulances in the side streets.

Helicopters patrolled the city. It is reported that the organizers
began the march on the outskirts of Berlin and planned to complete
it in the center of the city. But the police did not allow doing this.

“The international organizations and diplomats accredited in Baku
criticized the authorities when representatives of the radical
opposition tried to conduct the unauthorized rally in the center of
Baku in 2011, which resulted in a breach of public order and damaging
to citizens and organizations,” he said. “I wonder if we will hear
the same criticism regarding the riots in Berlin?”

“The rise of nationalism and xenophobia is being observed in Germany
today. Regional and federal bodies do not resist this process,” he
said. “Today, it is unsafe for a foreigner who does not look like
European to walk along Berlin streets.”

“At present, Baku is one of the safest cities in the world,” he
stressed. “Eurovision song contest head Jan Ola Sand has recently
confirmed this and admitted that Baku is a safe city.”

The 57th Eurovision Song Contest will be held in the Baku Crystal Hall
near the State Flag Square. The semi-finals will be held in Baku on
May 22 and May 24 and the final on May 26.

The logo for the 2012 Eurovision Song Contest is ‘Fire Flower’,
while the motto is Light your fire.

Azerbaijan won the right to host the prestigious European song
contest after the victory of Eldar Gasimov and Nigar Jamal (Ell /
Nikki) at Eurovision 2011 in Dusseldorf, Germany last May.

ISTANBUL: What’s In A Name? Re-Revisited

WHAT’S IN A NAME? RE-REVISITED
by BURAK BEKDİL

Hurriyet
May 2 2012
Turkey

So, you, Honorable Prime Minister, say you hate the “invasion of our
language by foreign words”? And you complain of too many “foreign
words” on commercial displays, as, for example, “‘mall,’ ‘computer,’
‘tower’ and ‘check-up'”? But what exactly do you mean when you say
“foreign”?

Wikipedia describes a foreign language as “a language indigenous to
another county.” By that definition, you are correct that “mall,”
“computer,” “tower” and “check-up” are foreign words, because they
are not Turkish and are “indigenous to another country” (or other
countries). Just the same way that “Tayeb” [from which the prime
minister’s name, Tayyip is derived] means “good” or “kind” in Arabic.

But that’s not all.

In my previous column titled “What’s in a name?” I wrote the following:

“My grandfather came from Georgia, and settled first in Rhizios. My
mother was a proud Chalcedonian. Sadly, my parents died two and a
half years ago, and were laid to rest in Aivali.”

“I was born in Ancyra, but spent part of my childhood in Smyrna
[İzmir]. I took my military training as a conscript in Amaseia,
but then I was transferred to Cevlik via El-Azez.”

“Our prime minister is from Potamia, and our president is from
Caesarea. The president’s three predecessors, chronologically, came
from Akroenos, Sparta and Maldiye.”

“Our proud nation owes its independence largely to a successful war
at Gallipoli. … Every year [we also] commemorate Ataturk’s landing
at Sampsus to launch our War of Independence. But the first capital
of the Ottomans was Prousa, anyway.

“I hope the generous Turkish hearts that can now restore Kurdish [town]
names will no longer be agitated each time Greeks call Constantinople
by its original name — Konstantinopolis. And, by the way, Turks who
proudly insist that Istanbul is Istanbul should be reminded that even
that presumably Turkish name is a cognate of the Greek ‘Eis tin Polin’
meaning ‘to the city.'”

“The name controversy may be more complex than one could imagine. The
Kurds may be rightfully happy to get the names of their villages
back, but they might be equally embarrassed in some other cases. For
instance, where does the name of the Kurdish homeland, Mesopotamia,
come from?

Kurdish? No, just Greek, meaning ‘between the rivers,’ the Euphrates
and Tigris.” (“What’s in a name?” Hurriyet Daily News, Sept. 9, 2009).

I apologize for the long but necessary reminder. But here is another
passage from “What’s in a name? — Revisited,” Hurriyet Daily News,
July 19, 2011:

“In another appearance of what this columnist calls ‘the official
Turkish humor machine,’ the president of the supreme court that ruled
in favor of [a] ban on foreign names is named HaÅ~_im Kılıc. ‘Hashim’
or ‘Hasheem’ is a common Arabic male name (the ‘unofficial’ humor of
the story is that this columnist’s name is also Arabic). The official
humor machine keeps on rolling when we look at the men who rule this
country in which names representing foreign races and nations are
banned. For fun’s sake let’s narrow our sample to the first names of
the president, the prime minister and the Cabinet ministers. Of those
27 names, 20 are common Arabic names, and two are Turkish versions
of common Arabic name.

Only five are Turkish names. Legally, a ban on foreign names means
a ‘Richard’ is no different than a ‘Tayyip.’ An Arabic name is no
different than an Icelandic name, because they are both foreign,
both non-Turkish.”

“Yes it’s the religion, but it’s also the culture. One’s automatic
acceptance of a Muslim name would not extend to a Muslim Indonesian
name. In other words, this is precisely why claiming someone has
Armenian ancestors is deemed libel to be settled in a courtroom,
but claiming someone has Arab ancestors is not.”

Unfortunately, Honorable Prime Minister, if we deprived our language
of “all foreign words” — all, i.e., including Arabic and Persian —
we might fail to communicate, and you might fail to deliver your
perfect speeches. Or, you should explain why Arabic names are not
foreign, but others are. Sadly, you are a couple of centuries too
late to prove that the Turks are in fact Arabs.

ANKARA: Global Trends 2030 Report Says Turkey To Be One Of Influenti

GLOBAL TRENDS 2030 REPORT SAYS TURKEY TO BE ONE OF INFLUENTIAL COUNTRIES

Journal of Turkish Weekly
May 2 2012

EU Global Trends Report said “Turkey will take an influential role
in the globalising world by 2030.”

According to “Global Trends 2030” report, Turkey will thrive.

According to EU experts, Turkey will be taking its place in the
globalising world by 2030 but there are doubts over Turkey’s full
membership to the European Union.

The 2010 European Union Budget provided the European Commission for
two years with necessary financing to explore the ‘long-term trends on
major policy issues facing the EU’ as a pilot project. Project shaped
up the European Union Institute for Security Studies’ report. Report
highlights that by 2030, there will be a multipolar world and none
of the countries will be able to carry on dominating individually.

The report underlines that the US is likely to be the world’s major
military power, however China’s military will keep growing. Present
trends seem to show that there won’t be single hegemonic world power.

US and China will be the most influential countries of 2030. Besides,
India will keep gaining power. Additionally, Russia and Japan will
lose the great power status by 2030.

Polycentrism will head towards Asia with the accompany of economic
power, where over half of the world’s population will be concentrated
by 2030. Report supposes that China will be the largest economic
power with 19 percent share of world gross domestic product. Rising
middle-power countries will become more prominent. These include
Indonesia, Turkey, and South Africa who are members of the G20 already.

Indonesia, South Africa and Turkey are more likely to take a bigger
role by 2030 cause these counties have potentials on improving their
social and economical modernization as well as human development,
said the report.

On its view about Turkey, the report says, “Turkey has been a middle
power for most of the last two centuries, and its elites and people
are confident about the country’s global and regional position.

Current trends suggest Turkey will maintain and even bolster its
status as a middle power in demographic, economic, territorial and
military terms. Indicators on economic growth, political stability and
democratisation, political and cultural influence abroad, and citizen
and elite confidence point in this direction. Turkey is also likely
to become a pivotal regional power. Turkish citizens, capital and
institutions will continue to integrate with the global economy and
network society; and ties with the EU and Turkey’s immediate neighbours
and other regions will become deeper and denser. The recent emphasis
on Turkey’s role in the Middle East should be balanced by an awareness
of the country’s relations with the EU, the Balkans, the Black Sea,
Russia, the Caucasus, Central Asia, the Mediterranean and the US,
and of its evolving and newly emergent links with the rest of Asia,
Africa and the Americas.”

Turkey’s role on globalizing world will be shaped by its work
and interests within international groups such as NATO, G20, the
Organization of the Islamic Cooperation and the EU. Report points out,
“It is difficult to predict whether Turkey will join the EU by 2030
as there are both push and pull factors. Turkey may opt to work with
different countries to further its interests in a rapidly changing
Middle East, but this is unlikely to become an alternative to EU
integration. To pursue a middle power career, Turkey must address key
weaknesses, including unresolved minority issues (Kurdish and Armenian
claims and rights), energy dependency, an environmentally unsustainable
development model and the mismanagement of natural resources, human
development shortcomings, and its exposure to potentially devastating
seismic activity.”

The report states that European countries such as Britain, France
and Germany will gain power in a polycentric world especially if the
pace of European integration is not cracked. However, they may take
an individual global role and be recognized as strategic players in
their own right. Furthermore, if the European Union keeps developing,
improves the pace of economic growth and finds solutions to the debt
crisis, they will become more stronger within the international arena
and be more influential globally.

The report states that by 2030 all the Balkan countries are likely
to be members of the EU, however there will be problems over border
conflicts and internal disputes, particularly in Bosnia-Herzegovina.

The report also mentions the Cyprus issue and Turkish-Armenian
reconciliations. It states that “the division of Cyprus could be
mitigated by greater convergence between Turkey and the EU, but the
difficulties attending the process of enlargement to Turkey may persist
and render the solution of the Cyprus question more problematic. And
Turkish-Armenian reconciliation could pave the way for a resolution
of the conflict, although this may be difficult to achieve in the
coming decade.”

Iranian-Armenian Energy Projects Continue

IRANIAN-ARMENIAN ENERGY PROJECTS CONTINUE

Vestnik Kavkaza
May 3 2012
Russia

Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan has confirmed development of
joint project with Iran, News Armenia reports.

A petroleum pipeline and a dam are being constructed at River Araz.

The pipeline is being designed, its costs, efficiency and investments
are being studied.

Construction of the Iran-Armenia Petroleum Pipeline was to start in
2011 and end in 2014. Armenia would be able to transport gasoline
and diesel fuel from Iran and Gulf states to Tabriz and then to Eraskh.

This would reduce expenses for fuel purchases. Construction of an oil
pipeline in Armenia will be financed Armenia rather than Iran. $100
million will be invested.

Armenia and Iran plan to build two largest dams of South Caucasus
on River Araz. One will be in Armenia’s Megri, the other in Iran’s
Karachilar. Each will have an output of up to 793 million KW/h. The
power plant in Megri will produce 130 MW. It will take 5 years and
$323 million to build, using Iranian investments.